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Community Works’ rep will ensure HIV community involved in local plans to reduce HIV to zero

A Community Works’ representative will help ensure that the HIV community is involved in plans for the city to work towards becoming the first UK city to reduce HIV to zero.

Gary Pargeter
Gary Pargeter

The Council’s Health & Wellbeing Board have agreed to work towards the goal of zero new HIV infections, zero HIV related deaths, and zero HIV stigma in Brighton and Hove.

This will make Brighton & Hove an HIV fast-track city and the only city in the UK so far, to make this commitment.

The Council is putting together a steering group which will oversee the fast-track city initiative.

Gary Pargeter, the project manager at Lunch Positive, who is Community Works’ new HIV representative will represent Community Works’ members who work with and support people with HIV locally, and will engage with the HIV community to ensure their views and experiences are also taken into account.

A key aspect of the towards zero strategy is also to engage more widely within the voluntary and community sector, and Gary will undertake an important role in this.

Gary said of his new role: “I’m delighted to be representing local voluntary groups and organisations as part of this important initiative. I look forward to ensuring that the local HIV community’s experiences inform the plans and decisions taken by the steering group.”

Sally Polanski
Sally Polanski

Sally Polanski, CEO of Community Works added: “It is excellent news that the Council has agreed to work towards reducing HIV to zero. We are looking forward to Gary representing our members and supporting the HIV community to be involved in this very important initiative.”

Community Works is the local support organisation for community groups, voluntary organisations, charities and social enterprises in Brighton, Hove, Adur and Worthing. Its 35 volunteer representatives share Community Works’ members’ views and knowledge with those responsible for planning and providing local services and projects.

Taking over the role of LGBT community rep from Gary Pargeter, is Reuben Davidson, from Allsorts Youth Project, who will represent Community Works’ members who work with and support LGBT people in the city.

Lunch Positive is a weekly Lunch club who provide a healthy meal each Friday to people who are HIV+.

Allsorts Youth Project supports and empowers young people under 26 who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans or unsure (LGBTU) of their sexual orientation and/or gender identity.

 

Lunch Positive to screen HIV documentary tonight as part of World Aids Day events

Lunch Positive will host a community screening of the moving HIV documentary We were here, on Wednesday, November 30.

web-600The film is a true story from those in San Francisco who lived through the early days of the AIDS epidemic and for some this will be a reminder and for others an insight.

This community event is part of the 2016 World AIDS Day commemorations and is being planned and put together by the Lunch Positive volunteer team as part of their contributions to World AIDS Day.

Everyone is welcome and the event is free of charge.  Doors will open at 6.45pm with a buffet served before the film starts.  Donations to cover food and venue hire are welcome.

The screening will be at Dorset Gardens Methodist Church, Dorset Gardens, Brighton. Seating is limited and everyone is encouraged to arrive in good time to secure a place.

Permission for this screening has been kindly granted to Lunch Positive by Director David Weissmam and Peccadillo Pictures.

“An edifying must-see that has received accolades at film festivals the world over, We were here is the first film to take a deep and reflective look back at the arrival and impact of a definitive chapter in San Francisco’s queer history. It explores how the City’s inhabitants were affected by, and how they responded to, a calamitous epidemic, opening a window of understanding to those who have only the vaguest notion of what transpired in those years. In the face of adversity they stood strong and united. This is their story.”


What: Community Film Screening for World AIDS Day We Were Here

Where: Lunch Positive at Dorset Gardens Methodist Church, Dorset Gardens, Brighton

When: Wednesday, November 30

Time: Buffet from 6.45pm: Screening at 7.30pm

For more information, click here:

Lunch Positive 26 Nov copy

‘Eyes Wide Open Cinema’ raise money for THT on World AIDS Day

To commemorate World AIDS Day 2016 Eyes Wide Open Cinema is hosting a screening of two films at Duke’s at Komedia.

eb-600

Proceeds from the screening will be donated to the Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) a charity working to create a world where people with HIV live healthy lives, free from prejudice and discrimination, and good sexual health is a right and reality for everyone.


BLUE
Director Derek Jarman. UK and Japan 1993. 89 minutes

The final film from legendary British director Derek Jarman is a profoundly moving reflection on the mental and physical and emotional strain caused by Jarman’s terminal illness. Completed just a year before his death from AIDS-related illness, the film takes the monochrome glow of a blue-filled frame to represent Jarman’s fading eyesight.

The script, recited by actors and by Jarman himself, alternates poetry and narrative prose around different meanings and interpretations of the colour blue, autobiographical episodes and invocations to a character called Blue. An intimate and intensely affecting piece of cinematic experimentation with spellbinding consequences.


web-300THIS IS NOT AN AIDS ADVERTISEMENT
Director Isaac Julien. UK 1988. 14 mins

An unashamedly erotic and stylish video which reclaims some of the territory seized by the new puritans of the 1980s. The first part contains lyrical images of death and loss, while the second half is assertive and celebratory, accompanied by a funk-heavy soundtrack.


Event: Screening of Blue + This is Not An AIDS Advertisement

Where: Duke’s at Komedia, 44-47 Gardner St, Brighton BN1 1UN

When: Thursday, December 1

Time: 9pm

Cost: Tickets £8-£11

To book tickets online, click here:

Brighton Kemptown MP says “HIV stigma: Not Retro, Just Wrong”

On World AIDS Day Simon Kirby MP will join forces with NAT (National Aids Trust) to say “HIV stigma: Not Retro, Just Wrong.”

Simon Kirby MP
Simon Kirby MP takes HIV test at Terrence Higgins Trust in Brighton

World AIDS Day is tomorrow, December 1, and this year Simon Kirby MP for Brighton Kemptown & Peacehaven is asking people to join the fight against HIV stigma.

Although HIV treatment and prevention are so much better than they were 30 years ago, public attitudes have not progressed as far or as fast.

Stigma remains an unacceptable blight on the lives of people living with HIV. It negatively affects their lives, and can prevent them from accessing treatment and can stop people at risk from getting an HIV test.

Unlike many of the products and styles we love to bring back from the 80s and 90s, stigma is something that should be left in the past. HIV stigma is not retro, it’s just wrong.

Simon says: “I am proud to wear a red ribbon to mark this year’s World AIDS Day. I want to send the message that there is no place for HIV stigma in Brighton Kemptown & Peacehaven. I am joining forces with the National AIDS Trust to encourage people in Brighton Kemptown & Peacehaven to visit www.worldaidsday.org and find out the facts about HIV. There are more than 100,000 people living with HIV in the UK. We must do more to prevent stigma from disrupting their lives. Together we can put an end to this senseless prejudice.”

Deborah Gold
Deborah Gold

Deborah Gold, Chief Executive of the National AIDS Trust, added: “World AIDS Day is an opportunity for people everywhere to unite in the fight against HIV and to show their support for people living with HIV. I am pleased to see Simon recently took an HIV test at THT in Brighton to support National HIV testing week and THT in their efforts to increase HIV testing in Brighton.”

 

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